Compare Car Mechanic Simulator 2018 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Red Dot Games. Published by PlayWay S.A.. Released on 7/28/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Racing, Simulation.

Strip it, fix it, flip it, repeat, if the meditative loop of pulling apart a rusted wreck and selling it for profit sounds like your idea of a good time, this one has nearly 53,000 Steam reviews saying you are not alone.

My first honest question before recommending any sim like this is always: will someone who just wants to poke around actually stick with it, or will they bounce off a wall of unlabelled menus inside twenty minutes? With Car Mechanic Simulator 2018, the answer sits somewhere frustratingly in the middle. The core loop, take a repair job, diagnose broken parts across the engine, suspension, and brakes, order replacements, collect your cash, then unlock more garage tools and do it again, is genuinely satisfying in the way that sorting a big pile of Lego by colour is satisfying. You do not need to be a real-world gear-head. You just need to be okay with repetition by design. The garage itself builds up nicely over time. Early on you are wrenching with basic hand tools. Further into the progression you unlock a tire balancer, spring puller, detailing kit, and the star of the show: an engine crane that lets you yank entire powerplants out, mount them on a stand, and perform surgery without wrestling the rest of the car. A paint shop opens up for liveries and bodywork. A test track lets you check brakes and suspension before signing off on a job. Sandbox mode drops all the business-building structure entirely if you just want to mess around with builds, and Expert mode strips out the helpful part highlights for players who want genuine diagnostic challenge. Both are included in the base game with no extra spend required, a genuine quality-of-life upgrade over earlier entries in the series. The real hook beyond the day-to-day jobs is the Barn Find and Junkyard system. Wandering into an abandoned barn and finding a rust-eaten classic that you can strip, restore, and either keep for your collection or flip at the in-game car auction is a great loop, the kind of thing that makes you look up and realise two hours have disappeared. There are also story-driven jobs that pop up alongside the randomly generated ones, though seasoned players note they start feeling like shopping lists rather than mini-narratives after a while. Steam Workshop support extends the car roster significantly if the base 40-plus vehicles feel limited, and the DLC catalogue adds officially licensed real-world brands, Porsche, Mazda, Dodge, Mercedes-Benz, Jeep, and more, for players who want named iron instead of fictional analogues. Where things get wobbly: the tutorial quality has split the community sharply, with some players praising it for new players and others saying it barely covers the surface. The inventory and parts-shopping workflow is clunky, you memorise what you need, exit to the shop, buy it, go back, and repeat, which genuinely eats a large chunk of playtime for no good reason. The achievement grind at 100 percent completion is notoriously punishing, to the point where it is better treated as a non-goal. This is also strictly a solo PC experience with no split-screen or live co-op to speak of, so if you were hoping to bring friends along for wrenching night, that is not on the menu here. Intel Integrated Graphics are explicitly unsupported, so laptop players should check their hardware before diving in. For the right player, someone who genuinely enjoys the rhythm of diagnosing, disassembling, and rebuilding, this is a well-worn, well-liked sandbox that holds up years after release. For players expecting a breezy drop-in experience or any kind of competitive or co-op mode, it will feel thin pretty quickly. Treat it as a solo chill-out game with a long tail and a healthy modding scene, and it delivers. Riley, Scout Team

Car Mechanic Simulator 2018
RacingSimulation

Car Mechanic Simulator 2018

Jul 28, 2017Red Dot GamesPlayWay S.A.
GamerScout Says

Strip it, fix it, flip it, repeat, if the meditative loop of pulling apart a rusted wreck and selling it for profit sounds like your idea of a good time, this one has nearly 53,000 Steam reviews saying you are not alone.

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About Car Mechanic Simulator 2018

My first honest question before recommending any sim like this is always: will someone who just wants to poke around actually stick with it, or will they bounce off a wall of unlabelled menus inside twenty minutes? With Car Mechanic Simulator 2018, the answer sits somewhere frustratingly in the middle. The core loop, take a repair job, diagnose broken parts across the engine, suspension, and brakes, order replacements, collect your cash, then unlock more garage tools and do it again, is genuinely satisfying in the way that sorting a big pile of Lego by colour is satisfying. You do not need to be a real-world gear-head. You just need to be okay with repetition by design. The garage itself builds up nicely over time. Early on you are wrenching with basic hand tools. Further into the progression you unlock a tire balancer, spring puller, detailing kit, and the star of the show: an engine crane that lets you yank entire powerplants out, mount them on a stand, and perform surgery without wrestling the rest of the car. A paint shop opens up for liveries and bodywork. A test track lets you check brakes and suspension before signing off on a job. Sandbox mode drops all the business-building structure entirely if you just want to mess around with builds, and Expert mode strips out the helpful part highlights for players who want genuine diagnostic challenge. Both are included in the base game with no extra spend required, a genuine quality-of-life upgrade over earlier entries in the series. The real hook beyond the day-to-day jobs is the Barn Find and Junkyard system. Wandering into an abandoned barn and finding a rust-eaten classic that you can strip, restore, and either keep for your collection or flip at the in-game car auction is a great loop, the kind of thing that makes you look up and realise two hours have disappeared. There are also story-driven jobs that pop up alongside the randomly generated ones, though seasoned players note they start feeling like shopping lists rather than mini-narratives after a while. Steam Workshop support extends the car roster significantly if the base 40-plus vehicles feel limited, and the DLC catalogue adds officially licensed real-world brands, Porsche, Mazda, Dodge, Mercedes-Benz, Jeep, and more, for players who want named iron instead of fictional analogues. Where things get wobbly: the tutorial quality has split the community sharply, with some players praising it for new players and others saying it barely covers the surface. The inventory and parts-shopping workflow is clunky, you memorise what you need, exit to the shop, buy it, go back, and repeat, which genuinely eats a large chunk of playtime for no good reason. The achievement grind at 100 percent completion is notoriously punishing, to the point where it is better treated as a non-goal. This is also strictly a solo PC experience with no split-screen or live co-op to speak of, so if you were hoping to bring friends along for wrenching night, that is not on the menu here. Intel Integrated Graphics are explicitly unsupported, so laptop players should check their hardware before diving in. For the right player, someone who genuinely enjoys the rhythm of diagnosing, disassembling, and rebuilding, this is a well-worn, well-liked sandbox that holds up years after release. For players expecting a breezy drop-in experience or any kind of competitive or co-op mode, it will feel thin pretty quickly. Treat it as a solo chill-out game with a long tail and a healthy modding scene, and it delivers. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

steamGarage ManagementBarn FindEngine SwapPart DiagnosisSandbox ModeExpert ModeSteam WorkshopLicensed Cars DLCSolo ExperienceRestoration Loop

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
91%(52,947)

Game Info

Developer
Red Dot Games
Publisher
PlayWay S.A.
Release Date
Jul 28, 2017

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